1. I mean: the access times were completely irregular. I've never seen a disk like that one before.
Most times I get a black map with a few grey blocks on a regular basis (which doesn't necessarily mean that the head is failing, probably just a small difference in electric or magnetic properties of the head, or an imperfect calibration).
But the color map of that disk was amazing. It had just too many grey blocks. The odds weren't against the heads. You just don't get an head set like that one. I believe the problem was more like overdamping of the arm. Or something else among a dozen things.
2. In my case, the disk had a hard bad block, but in such a way, that most low level software just couldn't overpass it. I wonder know why... In Damon's case, it could be just a soft one with such a bit sequence that even the controller screwed up completely. After all, there are disks with bugs that make the controller screw around with data encoding. Why not the other way? That's why I suggested erase waits to clean the mess.
I didn't even know that MHDD could deal with some hard bad blocks. But it's nice to know
A final word about that WD disk: I cut the disk size at 60%.
Regards,
Daniel
P.S.: Talking about free software... at the time I tried Spinrite 6 (which I've been using with nice results, although GRC propaganda is based a lot on wishfull thinking). It also failed. Since then, my first analysis is always made with MHDD. Thank you, Dmitry.
Posted 22/3/2005, 21:06:A correction: at the previous post, I was thinking about underdamping, not overdamping. Altough an overdamped arm would also increase seek times.
Daniel